Roh Tae-woo

Roh Tae-woo (4 December 1932-) was President of South Korea from 25 February 1988 to 25 February 1993, succeeding Chun Doo-hwan and preceding Kim Young-sam. He was a member of the Democratic Justice Party and the New Korea Party.

Biography
Roh Tae-woo was born in Dalseong County, Japanese Korea (now Dong-gu, South Korea) in 1932. He enlisted in the South Korean military academy in 1955, and he rose steadily within army ranks to become a general. In 1979, he assisted General Chun Doo-hwan in the December coup, becoming commander of the powerful secret service in 1980. He joined the newly founded Democratic Justice Party in 1981, retiring from the army in order to pursue a political career. He held various ministerial posts, and from 1983 supervised the organization of the 1988 Olympic Games. In 1987, he won the country's first direct presidential elections for sixteen years, succeeding Chun in the first peaceful transition of power since World War II. He surprised his people by introducing political reform, inaugurating the Sixth Republic in 1988. He also relaxed the country's foreign policy, opening dialogues, such as with the Soviet Union and even North Korea. Nevertheless, student demonstrations continued unabated, in protest against human rights violations and political and economic corruption, forcing him to retire. In 1996, he was sentenced to 22.5 years' imprisonment on charges of corruption and for his pivotal role in the brutal suppression of the Kwangju uprising of 1980, in which around 8,000 protesters were killed. He was released in December 1997, pardoned by Kim Young-sam.